It doesn't do anything. It will still work.
Jam/Jelly has no effect on the magnet or its magnetism, but it will cause the magnet to become sloppy and sticky.
If there is a magnet in the doorbell when it is connected, the result would be that the magnetic switch inside the doorbell is activated when the magnet is near, causing the doorbell to ring or chime. The presence of the magnet completes the circuit and triggers the doorbell mechanism.
Move towards the U magnet so that the poles attach.
Breaking a bar magnet in half creates two smaller magnets, each with a north and south pole. The poles are then found at the broken ends of each new magnet. Additionally, breaking the magnet does not affect the overall magnetic field strength of the original magnet.
What part of the computer? what kind of monitor do you have? if you stick the magnet to the screen it will appear to "kill" the colors. that's if you use an older model screen. I don't believe plasma screens will do the same thing with a magnet. the "melting" affect is like that if a pressing force on a plasma screen or a caculator screen. you can also ERASE your entire Harddrive with a powerfull enough magnet (or if it gets too close), be careful. if you have already hurt your screen with the magnet, there is a degause button in the menu of your screens settings on the monitor. if your monitor is so old that you don't have a menu, get a new monitor.
It will stick to the refrigerator
There are refrigerator magnets; you can put a school picture onto a thin magnet and put it on a refrigerator (as long as it has a metal door)There are car magnets; such as a sports team symbol with a magnet on the back. You just put them on the back of your car.
The magnet on the refrigerator is holding up the shopping list.
it attracts
A magnet sticks to a refrigerator because the refrigerator door is made of a ferromagnetic material, such as steel. The magnet and the refrigerator door have opposite magnetic poles, causing them to attract and stick together.
it is a magnet and you just stick it to your fridge
it is a magnet and you just stick it to your fridge
The refrigerator isn't actually a magnet, it it simply made of metal which magnets can then stick to.
The term "refrigerator magnet" is ambiguous and may refer to any number of types of magnets. However, typically a refrigerator magnet is going to be relatively weak and made of the most inexpensive materials available. Hard refrigerator magnets are likely iron. Flexible refrigerator magnets are made of bonded ferrite powders; barium ferrite is among the most common. In general classification, a refrigerator magnet is a permanent magnet.
nuthin at all you will have no effect
Usually, nothing.
Nothing. Copper is not magnetic.